To experiment with the possible privatization of its primary education system, Liberia initiated the Partnership Schools of Liberia (PSL), which turned over the management of 93 public schools to eight private contractors. This has been a controversial experiment, both in Liberia and worldwide. A randomized controlled trial (RCT) study was set up comparing the PSL schools with matched public schools, and the report on the first year results of the RCT was recently published. A variety of blogs, op eds, and tweets have discussed their findings, including one on this site. I have just completed a paper critiquing the RCT study and the PSL, and I report on my results here. I thought the RCT study was carefully and competently done, but I have some major disagreements with some of the analyses and the interpretation of findings.

Did test scores in PSL schools increase by 60%?

This is the key and most disseminated finding of the RCT study. But is it valid? This result is based on a regression analysis of post-test scores on whether students are in the PSL schools and a few control variables. Notably absent was any control for a student’s pretest score, which is extremely unusual. In almost all RCTs, the impact of the treatment is measured by the gain in the post-test score over the pre-test score. It turns out that the pre-test score in the PSL schools was significantly higher than in the government schools. The RCT study argues that this was due to late pre-testing and that the higher score reflects that the PSL schools were already doing better due to the intervention. But this is speculation based on very little evidence. When they do control for pre-test, the effect of the PSL is considerably reduced to about 45%, on average, across math and English.

Another way to look at the impact of the PSL on test scores is to look directly at the raw test data. The test data in the analyses above does not use the raw test data but weights it according to item response theory. If we examine the impact of the PSL on the raw test data, we find that the impact of the PSL is even lower, on average about 35%. Moreover, the relatively low effect size makes it likely that neither the experimental nor control groups are learning much.

What are the reasons for the gain in test scores?

The RCT study claims that about one-quarter of the gain in test scores was due to reduced teacher absenteeism resulting from better management of the PSL schools. I argue that the statistical procedure used is completely invalid, and that any gain in test scores has little, if anything, to do with the private management of schools. Instead, the gains in test scores are most likely the result of five policy changes that could easily be implemented in regular public schools without any need for outsourcing to the private sector.

First, PSL schools were allowed to increase school hours, on average, by 22%, with one of the few effective contractors increasing contact hours by 70%. Second, PSL schools were allowed to deviate from the primary school curriculum and emphasize instruction in math and English, thus teaching to the test. Third, PSL schools were permitted to have lower class sizes than regular public schools. Fourth, PSL schools were allowed to replace many existing classroom teachers with much better trained, higher paid, recent graduates of teacher training institutions that had been focusing on math and English instruction. Finally, the private contractors were able to afford to supply more of basic inputs like textbooks, chalk, and pens and pencils.

Are the PSL Results Generalizable and Sustainable?

The RCT study is careful to say that the PSL is neither sustainable nor generalizable, and I agree. PSL schools were subsidized to double the $50/student average expenditure on primary school students, and most private contractors supplemented that by very large amounts, up to an additional $700 to $1000 per student. Moreover, the schools in the PSL were not at all a random sample of schools in Liberia. Both experimental and control schools were purposefully selected to be closer to the capital, Monrovia, close to paved roads, have more students and classrooms, as well as access to better infrastructure like water and latrines or toilets. Both were also allowed to have many more teachers per school than average. All this makes the value of the PSL and this RCT study for Liberian policy-makers very questionable.

Cost and Cost-Effectiveness

Given the very high expenditures and relatively low test score gains, the RCT study concludes that the experiment is far from cost-effective. I concur and add an examination of PSL expenditures. The PSL and its RCT are very expensive. I add together the $50 per student supplement received, the higher salaries paid to PSL teachers, the cost of running the RCT, and the expenditures added by the private contractors. In total, the PSL is likely to have cost over $25 million for the three-year period! This is a very expensive experiment, and this does not include the substantial additional costs that will be incurred with the planned expansion of the PSL. It should be noted that Liberia decided to substantially expand the PSL even before the RCT study was completed, indicating that the decision was not based on evidence.

Is it worth it?

My conclusion is that the PSL is a waste of resources. There is a huge international literature that clearly answers the question of whether private schools are better than public schools. They are not. With similar students, private and public schools show similar achievement levels. Moreover, as this paper shows, the test score gains of the PSL schools are very likely due to changes that could easily be made in regular public schools. Minister of Education Werner has indicated that Liberia has the potential in the medium term to double primary school expenditures per pupil from $50 to $100. These additional resources could go a long way towards improving government schools and student learning without the need to privatize Liberia’s educational system. This would be a key question for the new President to consider.

2 Responses to The Partnership Schools for Liberia: A critical analysis

Indeed the report shows the benefit of extra instructional time, teacher education, and resources. But no matter how much effort will be put, the results of all Liberian schools will be modest when taught in English. To get advances, and do so with government schools, reading must be taught in transparent orthographies. These include local languages and pidgin English, spelled as is the Krio of Sierra Leone. Standard English spelling should be taught only after automaticty in transparent orthographies.
Such advice has been repeatedly given to the Ministry, but these interventions project low status, so they are disregarded.
Given these decisions as well as special interests, privatization will be the way of the future. Many charter schools in the US reinforce racial divisions and perform poorly, but there is money to be made from the poor. Once the companies got a foothold in Liberian public education, they will not go away.